Proposed national securities regulator an opportunity for improvement, says CSTO panel |
Date: Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Author: Investment Executive
Constitutionality uncertainties around the proposed
national securities regulator should be resolved within the next year,
and in the meantime, the government is working to convince all provinces
and territories of the widespread benefits of a single regulator.
“Our
objective is to produce a plan and a project that will attract the
support of all 13 provinces and territories, but we’re not quite there
yet,” said Doug Hyndman, CEO and chair of the Canadian Securities
Transition Office, which has been working to develop a proposed Canadian
Securities Act and a plan for transition to the new regulatory regime.
Hyndman
and other representatives from the transition office participated in a
panel discussion hosted by law firm Torys LLP in Toronto on Tuesday.
Their comments came a few weeks after the federal government tabled the
proposed new Canadian Securities Act, and referred it to the Supreme
Court of Canada for an opinion on whether the act is within the
legislative authority of parliament. Two provinces, Alberta and Quebec,
which oppose the plan, are challenging it in court.
The panelists said they are
confident that these challenges will be resolved within a year.
“There
is a significant effort to have the litigation resolved as soon as
possible,” said Larry Ritchie, executive vice-president and senior
policy advisor at the CSTO.
The panelists said the proposed act
would lead to a system with stronger and more effective enforcement,
greater investor protection and greater efficiency, among other
benefits.
They argued that the current system of securities
regulation in Canada is fragmented and dysfunctional in many ways,
particularly in terms of enforcement. Ritchie said there are too many
“silos” and a lack of coordination that prevent the enforcement system
from functioning effectively.
“We need to try to break down the
silos, and that’s what we think the act does,” he said.
In
particular, the new act would incorporate criminal code provisions
relating to securities fraud, insider trading and market manipulation,
rather than keeping these provisions separate from securities
regulation.
“The concept is to have a harmonization of criminal
and regulatory offences under one act,” Ritchie said. “There’s a greater
emphasis on coordination of efforts between regulators, police and
prosecutors.”
Bryan Davies, vice-chair of the CSTO, said the new
system would not only solve problems with the existing system, but lead
to many improvements.
“There’s room for opportunity to make
improvements on a host of fronts,” said Davies.
For instance, he
noted that the new act includes a role for the securities regulator to
play in promoting financial system stability, which Davies said is a key
component of regulation that has been missing in Canada. He noted that
regulators worldwide are addressing this area in the aftermath of the
financial crisis.
“This third purpose is being added in
virtually all jurisdictions to all elements of financial regulation,”
said Davies.
The new national regulator will also be held to
high standards of governance and accountability, he said. It will be
governed by an internal board of directors, and will be subject to all
the same accountability standards as a public company, including annual
reports and annual meetings.